The Story
The journey of mtDNA haplogroup T2B23
Origins and Evolution
Haplogroup T is a subclade of haplogroup JT and has long been associated with post‑glacial and Neolithic expansions from Near Eastern and Mediterranean source populations into Europe. T2B23 sits beneath T2B2 in the mtDNA phylogeny; T2B2 itself is estimated to have arisen on the Near Eastern / Mediterranean margin following the Last Glacial Maximum (the parent is commonly dated at ~11 kya). Given that placement, T2B23 is best interpreted as a younger derivative that likely formed during the later Neolithic or Bronze Age period as populations carrying T2B2 diversified while spreading through coastal and inland Mediterranean corridors.
Mutational motifs that define T2B23 are a small number of coding‑region and control‑region changes downstream of the T2B2 diagnostic mutations; these private mutations allow modern and ancient samples to be assigned to T2B23 when complete mitogenomes or high‑coverage control‑region data are available. The relative scarcity of reported T2B23 lineages in published datasets suggests a moderate to low effective population size for this subclade since its origin.
Subclades (if applicable)
As of the most recent public mitogenome compilations, T2B23 appears to be a terminal or lightly branched clade with few well‑characterized downstream subclades. Where present, minor internal branches reflect localized diversification in Mediterranean and adjacent European populations. Continued sequencing of complete mitogenomes from underrepresented regions (e.g., southern Balkans, western Anatolia, North Africa) could reveal additional substructure within T2B23.
Geographical Distribution
T2B23 is most often observed at low to moderate frequencies along the Near Eastern and Mediterranean margins and in parts of Southern and Central Europe. Its modern distribution mirrors that of many T2B2 derivatives and Neolithic‑associated maternal lineages: higher relative incidence in Italy, the central Mediterranean, parts of the Balkans and Iberia, with lower‑frequency occurrences in eastern Europe, the Caucasus, North Africa and sporadic findings in Central Asia. The haplogroup has also been reported in some Jewish maternal lineages, consistent with shared Near Eastern ancestry and historical diasporas.
In ancient DNA studies, T2B and T2B2 lineages are documented in early farmer contexts; T2B23 itself has been identified in a small number of archaeological samples in published and unpublished datasets, linking it to farming or post‑Neolithic communities in the Mediterranean and nearby regions.
Historical and Cultural Significance
Because T2B23 derives from a clade associated with Neolithic expansions, its temporal and spatial distribution is valuable for reconstructing maternal gene flow during the spread of farming and subsequent population movements. The haplogroup's presence in both archaeological farmer assemblages and in modern Mediterranean populations supports a model of partial continuity and localized admixture rather than wholesale replacement.
The lineage may also reflect later mobility associated with Bronze Age networked societies (maritime and overland trade), as well as historical movements such as Phoenician, Greek, Roman, and medieval exchanges across the Mediterranean — processes that can distribute otherwise regionally concentrated mtDNA lineages.
Conclusion
T2B23 is a relatively recent, regionally focused mtDNA subclade of T2B2 that provides a genetic signal of Near Eastern / Mediterranean maternal ancestry entering Europe during and after the Neolithic. While currently represented at low to moderate frequencies and with limited deep substructure, T2B23 contributes to the tapestry of maternal lineages that document the spread of farming and subsequent demographic interactions across the Mediterranean and adjacent regions. Additional complete mitogenome sequencing from targeted regions will sharpen estimates of its age, internal diversity, and archaeological associations.
Key Points
- Origins and Evolution
- Subclades (if applicable)
- Geographical Distribution
- Historical and Cultural Significance
- Conclusion